What is the meaning of over my dead body. Phrases containing over my dead body
See meanings and uses of over my dead body!Slangs & AI meanings
over my dead body
Slangs & AI derived meanings
Noun. A pleasant exploration of a thought, a self-indulgent fantasy. [Orig. U.S.]
Homosexual. Used in the novel "Trainspotting".
A source magazine slang for a Rapper who is good but has not gotten a record deal yet.
Bats (shortened from bats in the belfy) is slang for mad; demented.
Marijuana
New Hip Hop dance that just came out of the streets of LA, made popular by the movie "RISE". Affiliated with dances styles like clown walkin, the stripper dance.
Describes someone who claims to be able to carry out tasks and duties but does not have the necessary sckills and abilities to perform to a satisfactory standard. For example. "Johnny said he was going to beat rhe shit out of Will after the game but it turns out he's all mouth and trousers - Will gave him the finest kicking of hiso life!".
Bored; used to express boredom. ["Oh, how BORIS! Yawn"]
(ed: entered verbatim as I have no real idea what this is about - but it sounds almost sensible!) There is a "secret language" called Turkey-Irish. It is similar to Opish. For more details see http://members.tripod.com/quickbeam/merle/cipher.html If you want to delve deeper into this topic, go to http://www.deepfun.com/weblog/2002_12_11_blogger.html http://www.emich.edu/~linguist/issues/8/8-1570.html#1, http://www.factmonster.com/ipka/A0769354.html (includes a table of Double-Dutch equivalents), and http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/9073/66358 The etymology of the term Pig Latin is (I think)interesting. Of course, it has nothing to do with pigs. And nothing to do with Latin either, except that the derivation of the word Latin and the second half of Pig Latin are identical. Latin is simply the Semitic word LaSHoN = tongue, with the original dental-sound for the shin. Compare Ladino; and Lisan, the tongue of land that almost divides the Dead Sea into north and south parts. The "pig" in Pig Latin is related to Semitic peh-gimel-(heh) PaG(aH) = boy (or girl) before puberty. Compare English "page" = a boy servant or attendant, or the redundant "pageboy" haircut. There are a wide variety of children's languages. To the extent that they are designed to keep secrets from adults, they *must* change every generation.
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